IT IS apt to be overlooked that the
fundamental question about the Bible is not its inspiration but its
trustworthiness. It is possible to be without any theory of inspiration,
if we are assured of its trustworthiness. This is our present question: Can
we trust the Old Testament? A later chapter will similarly discuss the New
Testament.

It is sometimes thought that a question of this kind
is so technical as to be suitable only for scholars, and not for ordinary
Christians. This, however, is not the view of many leading scholars themselves.
Thus, Professor W. Robertson Smith, in his preface to a work by Wellhausen,
says, "The present volume gives the English reader an opportunity to form
his own judgment on questions which are within the scope of anyone who reads
the English Bible carefully, and is able to think clearly and without prejudice
about its contents." There are other criteria besides

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those of the expert. It is exactly the same with the Bible as it
is with most other departments of life; scholarship is not everything,
technicalities of learning cannot solve all problems. "There are more things
in heaven and earth than are dreamt of" in human philosophy, and it is at
once possible and a duty for the ordinary Christian to test the question
of trustworthiness for himself. There are at least five ways of doing this.
Each of them alone is important, but when they are taken together they are
seen to provide the ordinary Christian with opportunities and methods of
coming to a definite decision which is perfectly satisfying to the believing
soul. The Bible is so vital and so important to the ordinary Christian man
that unless he can be assured of its substantial trustworthiness as a record
of divine revelation, his life and testimony must inevitably suffer. It is
with the object of enabling him to arrive at this assurance for himself that
these methods are indicated, and certain fundamental principles are
enunciated.

1. The Historical Fact of the Jewish Nation
 The Jewish nation is a fact in history, and its record is given to
us in the Old Testament. There is no contemporary literature

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to check the account there given, and archeology only affords us
assistance on points of detail, not for any long or continuous period. This
record of Jewish history can be proved to have remained the same for many
centuries, and what we find in the Old Testament agrees with all that is
known from other sources.

Here before us we see the great outstanding objective
fact of a Jewish nation. The Old Testament, as we have it, is at once the
means and the record of their national life. It rose with them, grew with
them, formed them, and at the same time witnessed against them, and it is
to the Jews alone we look for the earliest testimony to the Old Testament
canon.

In the face of these historic facts, it is not too
much to say that the trustworthiness of the Old Testament is wholly in accord
with the historic growth and position of the Jewish people. And so we can
test the Old Testament by the history of the Jews and find it in entire agreement
with all that we know of Hebrew national life.

2. The Evidence of Archeology  During
the last eighty years a vast number of discoveries have been made in Egypt,
Palestine,

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Assyria, and Babylonia, many of which have been valuable for their
illustration of the Bible. The special advantage of these archeological results
is that they are, as it were, tangible and intelligible by ordinary men and
do not require expert scholarship to appreciate their meaning. The bearing
of this on the Old Testament is obvious. It is impossible to adduce these
discoveries in detail. And it is most striking and significant that not a
single discovery has been made which goes to set aside or even weaken the
trustworthiness of the Old Testament, while discovery after discovery has
supported its statements.

3. The Witness of our Lord and His Apostles
 For many reasons I should prefer to leave the authority of our
Lord out of this discussion, because I am convinced that scholarship is amply
sufficient to settle the question. But while this is impossible, it is important
to have a clear understanding of what it means to call attention to the evidence
of the New Testament embodying the attitude of our Lord and his followers.
We do not invoke the authority of Christ to close questions summarily, but
we adduce the witness of the New Testament in support of the
contentions

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of conservative historical scholarship. If we see that the witness
of Christ and his apostles corresponds with the Church's view of the Bible,
the testimony is assuredly weighty, and this is all that we
claim.

What, then, was our Lord's general view of the Old
Testament? That his Old Testament was practically, if not literally, the
same as ours, and that he had a thorough knowledge of its contents, are admitted
by all. Nor does any one seriously deny that Jesus Christ accepted the Old
Testament as authoritative, inspired, and the final court of appeal for all
questions connected with it. No one can go through the Gospels without being
impressed with the profound reverence of our Lord for the Old Testament and
with his constant use of it in all religious matters. Whether he referred
to Bible names, or incidents, or to its deep teaching about God, it was always
with the utmost reverence and with the evident conviction that it embodied
a divine revelation. This general view is confirmed by his detailed references.
His various testimonies to Old Testament persons imply their historical
character. His references to the facts of the Old Covenant equally assume
historicity. His whole earthly career was

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very largely a fulfillment of the Old Testament
Scriptures.

4. The Necessity of Spiritual Work  The use of the
Bible in connection with Christian service is universally recognized, and
the Old Testament part of it cannot be overlooked in work for God. Now no
one doubts that the blessing of the Spirit of Truth rests upon those who
are serving God while holding and teaching its trustworthiness. There are
men today of outstanding influence doing evangelistic and pastoral work who
cling tenaciously to the "old paths." Their belief has been no bar to the
grace of God. Blessing has manifestly come through use of the books of the
Old Testament as they now exist. Divine lessons have been brought home to
us by means of the present form of the older part of Scripture. While we
welcome all that scholarship can do in making the past clearer, and in enabling
us to enter more fully into the divine methods of work, yet the Bible is
the revelation of God for spiritual life, and not merely for historical
literature, however valuable. Whenever scholarship tends to forget this,
the question of the spiritual value of the Bible becomes
imperative.

For this reason we hold that any doctrine

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of the Bible for spiritual men must bear the seal of the Holy Spirit.
The view of its trustworthiness has the mark of this seal, and has been,
and is being, abundantly blessed.

5. The Testimony of Spiritual Experience 
There is one special way of testing this matter, for truth requires verification
by the spiritual man. When the divine Word is brought to bear upon the human
mind, conscience, heart and will, it carries its own conviction and elicits
its own verification. The experience of the soul soon bears witness in the
words of the Psalmist, "Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto
my path" (Psalm 119:105). "Thy Word is very pure: therefore Thy servant loveth
it" (Psalm 119:140).

We ask for an earnest and thorough consideration of
these five tests. It would have been possible to add others more technical
and more directly applicable to questions of scholarship, but these will
suffice to show how the ordinary Christian man can test the trustworthiness
of the Old Testament Scriptures. When these tests are applied separately
they will be seen to carry real weight, but when they are taken together
they constitute a cumulative effect and demand attention from all who seek
to know the truth.